XXI
SWEET TOOTH
AFTER his ride on old dog
Spot, Major Monkey went to the henhouse for eggs even oftener than he
had gone
before.
Perhaps he had become fonder
of eggs. Or perhaps he had become bolder. Anyhow, he noticed that
old dog Spot
gave him a wide berth. Whenever old Spot saw him he tucked his tail
between his
legs and ran, yelping, into the house.
Now, Johnnie Green soon
discovered that something – or somebody – was frightening
old Spot almost every
day. And having nothing else to do one morning, he made up his
mind that he
would watch and see what happened. So he climbed to the cupola on top
of the
big barn. And there he stayed for a long time, keeping a sharp eye on
old Spot
as he wandered about the farm buildings.
It was a good while before
anything happened. But Johnnie Green did not mind that. He had brought
plenty
of cookies to munch. And he pretended that he was a sailor in the
crow's nest of
a ship, on the lookout for a sail.
After a while he almost
forgot what he was really doing. He was leaning far out of the cupola,
shading
his eyes with one hand, and stuffing a cookie into his mouth with the
other,
and gazing off across the meadow, when all at once he heard old Spot
yelping.
That sound brought Johnnie
to his senses. And glancing down, he saw Spot tearing across the
barnyard,
making for the woodshed door in great bounds. And behind him, perched
on the
roof of the henhouse, Johnnie saw a familiar figure.
"It's the monkey
again!" Johnnie Green cried. And he clambered quickly to the ground.
But when he reached the
henhouse Major Monkey had fled. Johnnie could see his red coat
flickering
among the leaves in the orchard. But he knew it was useless to
follow.
Although Major Monkey was
aware that Johnnie Green had seen him again, he did not stop visiting
the
henhouse. To be sure, he became somewhat more wary. He never went
inside the
henhouse for eggs without first looking around carefully, to make sure
that
Johnnie Green wasn't watching him. And for a time the Major kept an eye
out for
traps.
He saw nothing of the sort
anywhere. But one day when he leaped to the window-sill of the henhouse
he was
delighted to find a lump of maple sugar, which some one had carelessly
left
there.
At least, that was what the
Major supposed. And with something a good deal like a chuckle he
ate the
dainty greedily. It was the first bit of sugar he had tasted since he
came to
Pleasant Valley. And Major Monkey was very fond of sweets.
Johnnie Green, or his
father, or the hired man seemed all at once to grow terribly careless
with
maple sugar. The Major hardly ever visited the henhouse without finding
a lump
somewhere. And if his liking for eggs hadn't brought him thither daily,
his
taste for sugar would have been enough to make him continue his visits.
At last there came a day
when Major Monkey discovered a thick pitcher on the henhouse floor. A
chain was
looped through its handle and nailed to the wall.
The Major grinned when he
saw the chain.
"They don't want this
pitcher to run away," he said to himself.
Being of a most curious turn
of mind, he looked into the pitcher. And then he promptly thrust in a
hand.
There was a good-sized lump
of sugar inside. And Major Monkey's fingers closed upon it greedily.
His queer face wrinkled with
annoyance when he found that he could not withdraw his hand.
Empty, it could
easily have slipped through the mouth of the pitcher. But with the
sugar
clutched in it, his hand stuck fast.
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